Commenting on the Past
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Edited by:
Jane D. Chaplin
, Irene Peirano Garrison and Christopher Stray
About this book
This Festschrift celebrates the career of Christina S. Kraus. For nearly four decades, Professor Kraus has been an influential voice, contributing to and sometimes defining numerous sub-fields in the study of classical literature, from commentaries to prose style and from Greek tragedy to Roman historians. She has collaborated with scholars to produce volumes on the commentary as a genre of scholarship and the idea of the canon. She is perhaps best known for her work on Livy and Roman historiography.
The resulting volume contains essays on Roman historians (Caesar, Livy, and Tacitus), prose style (Polybius, Cicero, Caesar, Livy, Seneca), intertextuality (Sallust, Virgil, Livy, Tacitus, Augustine), epistolography, reception (the Varronian disaster, Tacitism, George Bernard Shaw), and paratragedy.
In addition to their thematic unity, the papers are brought together both by cross-references and by the editors’ preface, which highlights the interconnections among the individual contributions. The preface also provides summaries of the essays.
Author / Editor information
Jane D. Chaplin, Middlebury College, Middlebury Vermont, USA; Irene Peirano Garrison, Harvard University, Cambridge Massachusetts, USA; Christopher Stray, Swansea University, Swansea, UK.
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Frontmatter
I -
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Dedication
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Preface
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Acknowledgements
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Contents
XV -
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Christina S. Kraus: Publications to Date
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Polybius and Livy’s Sentence Structure
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Narrative Inconsistencies and Ethical Constructions in Livy Book 31
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“I Want to Be Great Too – but How?” Alexander, Augustus, and Livy
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There and Back Again: Structure and Crossing in Livy’s Third Decade
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Livy on the Tiber Island: Writing Rome a Solo
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Recapturing the Capitol: Yet More Livian Refoundations
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Caesar’s Shrinking Lexicon
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On Endings and Beginnings in Caesar’s Bellum civile
125 -
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Cicero’s Caesarian Histories
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Tacfarinine Disorder: Sallustian and Livian Color at Tacitus, Annals 3.20–1
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Shadows of History: Sallustian Perspectives on Book 2 of Augustine’s Confessions
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Camilla and the Guys
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How Is Maecenas Like a Syllogism? Seneca on Style in the Moral Epistles
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The divergent epistolary cultures of greece and rome 400 BCE–400 CE
231 -
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The clades variana: literary commemoration of a roman military disaster
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Tacitus for courtiers
265 -
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Sex and empire: caesar and henry higgins
277 -
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The silence of the frogs: an experiment with paratragedy
293 -
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List of Contributors
293 -
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General Index
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